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Emmanuil Kazakevich

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22: 329:, who was still considered a traitor or at best a dubious figure at the time of writing. While Kazakevich, in the end, makes Lenin refute Zinovyev's fears and allegations, there is no attempt to show the latter as an evil or insincere person, which would have been a given for most Soviet writers at the time. 300:
and a 2015 remake "On the Road to Berlin"), was fiercely criticized in the Party press but that did not prevent his next story "Vesna na Odere" ("Spring on the Oder River," 1949) from being awarded a second Stalin Prize. The novella "In the Light of Day" (1960) explores ambiguities of guilt, bravery
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Kazakevich continued with Lenin as a main character in another story, "Enemies", written in his last year, and it is likely that he was planning to bring them together within a larger novel about Lenin. However, his sudden passing away in the summer of 1962 meant that those plans were left
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2002)) was an instant success and awarded a Stalin Prize for literature. The story describes an army intelligence unit during WW2 and their raid behind enemy lines. It showcases some of his later recurrent traits: the sharp, lyrical evocation of nature, the interest in moral conflicts and
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ambiguities, often relating to the transition between war and peace, the sense of humour and psychological observation. Many of his later stories are set during or shortly after the Second World War. Kazakevich's 1948 story "Dvoe v stepi" ("Two in the Steppe", adapted into a
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During the fifties, Kazakevich reached high positions in the Soviet Association of Writers and was aligned with the efforts of de-Stalinization. He kept picking up potentially sensitive subjects, and during his last years may have been working on a major novel about
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for frontier service. His war service brought him close to some of the major battles of 1943-45 and finally into the battle for Berlin; by this time he had become assistant director of intelligence in one of the armies involved.
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and also ran a theatre. During these years he began writing and publishing poems and stories in Yiddish. In 1941 he was in Moscow, taking part in the defence efforts of the capital and later joining the regular
476:("The Blue Notebook and two other stories"), translated into Swedish by H. BjΓΆrkegren; introduction gives biographical information. Askild & KΓ€rnekull, Stockholm/Progress, Moscow, 1978 318: 65:
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Knowledge article at ]; see its history for attribution.
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isthmus in the summer of 1917 and brings Lenin face to face both with ordinary people and with
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and memory as a soldier makes a visit to the widow of his fallen friend and unit officer.
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After 1945 Kazakevich began writing in Russian, and his debut short story
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to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
479: 127: 275: 322: 270: 261:. In the early 1930s he moved to the Jewish autonomous region of 258: 250: 229: 59: 221: 167: 306: 321:) appeared in 1961; it is set during Lenin's stay on the 291:("The Star", 1947, adapted into a film in 1949 (remake - 55: 257:) in 1913 and received training as an engineer at 490: 216:; February 24, 1913 – September 22, 1962) was a 92:{{Translated|ru|ΠšΠ°Π·Π°ΠΊΠ΅Π²ΠΈΡ‡, Π­ΠΌΠΌΠ°Π½ΡƒΠΈΠ» Π“Π΅Π½Ρ€ΠΈΡ…ΠΎΠ²ΠΈΡ‡}} 480:Bocharov, A. G. (Anatolii Georgievich) (1965), 80:accompanying your translation by providing an 46:Click for important translation instructions. 33:expand this article with text translated from 368:, Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1957. 356:, Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1952. 350:, Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1952. 269:, where he became the chairman of a local 422: 491: 15: 213: 13: 14: 565: 539:20th-century Russian male writers 206:Эммануи́л ГС́нрихович ΠšΠ°Π·Π°ΠΊΠ΅ΜΠ²ΠΈΡ‡ 198:Emmanuil Genrikhovich Kazakevich 126: 20: 220:author, poet and playwright of 442: 423:Kukulin, Il'ya (May 6, 2005). 416: 391: 90:You may also add the template 1: 384: 240: 374:, Progress Publishers, 1978. 235: 7: 10: 570: 554:20th-century Russian poets 354:Heart of a Friend: A Story 54:Machine translation, like 282: 205: 185: 177: 157: 134: 125: 118: 35:the corresponding article 474:Den blΓ₯ anteckningsboken 336: 181:writer, playwright, poet 399:"On the Road to Berlin" 380:, Fredonia Books, 2002. 366:The House on the Square 313:years. The short novel 245:Kazakevich was born at 224:extraction, writing in 101:For more guidance, see 544:Russian male novelists 524:Yiddish-language poets 509:People from Kremenchuk 472:Kazakevich, Emmanuil: 450:"Emmanuil Kazakevich" 103:Knowledge:Translation 74:copyright attribution 342:English translations 534:Soviet male writers 482:Emmanuil Kazakevich 214:Χ’ΧžΧ Χ•ΧΧœ Χ§ΧΦ·Χ–ΧΦ·Χ§Χ’Χ°Χ™Χ˜Χ© 120:Emmanuil Kazakevich 549:Russian male poets 360:Hungarian meetings 161:September 22, 1962 82:interlanguage link 378:The Blue Notebook 319:The Blue notebook 195: 194: 190:The Blue Notebook 145:February 24, 1913 114: 113: 47: 43: 561: 529:Soviet novelists 485: 465: 464: 462: 460: 446: 440: 439: 437: 435: 420: 414: 413: 411: 409: 395: 327:Grigory Zinovyev 215: 207: 164: 144: 142: 130: 116: 115: 93: 87: 60:Google Translate 45: 41: 24: 23: 16: 569: 568: 564: 563: 562: 560: 559: 558: 489: 488: 469: 468: 458: 456: 448: 447: 443: 433: 431: 421: 417: 407: 405: 397: 396: 392: 387: 339: 285: 255:Imperial Russia 243: 238: 166: 162: 146: 140: 138: 121: 110: 109: 108: 91: 85: 48: 25: 21: 12: 11: 5: 567: 557: 556: 551: 546: 541: 536: 531: 526: 521: 516: 514:Ukrainian Jews 511: 506: 501: 487: 486: 477: 467: 466: 441: 415: 389: 388: 386: 383: 382: 381: 375: 372:Selected Works 369: 363: 357: 351: 344: 343: 338: 335: 315:Sinyaya tetrad 284: 281: 253:(then part of 242: 239: 237: 234: 193: 192: 187: 183: 182: 179: 175: 174: 165:(aged 49) 159: 155: 154: 152:Russian Empire 136: 132: 131: 123: 122: 119: 112: 111: 107: 106: 99: 88: 66: 63: 52: 49: 30: 29: 28: 26: 19: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 566: 555: 552: 550: 547: 545: 542: 540: 537: 535: 532: 530: 527: 525: 522: 520: 517: 515: 512: 510: 507: 505: 502: 500: 497: 496: 494: 483: 478: 475: 471: 470: 455: 451: 445: 430: 426: 419: 404: 400: 394: 390: 379: 376: 373: 370: 367: 364: 361: 358: 355: 352: 349: 348:Star: A Story 346: 345: 341: 340: 334: 333:unfulfilled. 330: 328: 324: 320: 316: 312: 311:revolutionary 308: 302: 299: 294: 290: 280: 277: 272: 268: 264: 260: 256: 252: 248: 233: 231: 227: 223: 219: 211: 203: 199: 191: 188: 186:Notable works 184: 180: 176: 173: 169: 160: 156: 153: 149: 137: 133: 129: 124: 117: 104: 100: 97: 89: 83: 79: 75: 71: 67: 64: 61: 57: 53: 51: 50: 44: 38: 36: 31:You can help 27: 18: 17: 519:Jewish poets 484:(in Russian) 481: 473: 459:November 21, 457:. Retrieved 453: 444: 434:November 21, 432:. Retrieved 428: 418: 408:November 21, 406:. Retrieved 402: 393: 377: 371: 365: 359: 353: 347: 331: 314: 303: 288: 286: 244: 197: 196: 189: 172:Soviet Union 163:(1962-09-22) 78:edit summary 69: 40: 32: 504:1962 deaths 499:1913 births 309:during the 263:Birobidzhan 42:(July 2018) 493:Categories 454:Yad Vashem 385:References 267:Amur River 247:Kremenchuk 241:Early life 178:Occupation 148:Kremenchuk 141:1913-02-24 37:in Russian 298:1964 film 236:Biography 96:talk page 429:Eurozine 323:Karelian 276:Red Army 72:provide 271:kolkhoz 265:on the 259:Kharkiv 251:Ukraine 230:Yiddish 226:Russian 210:Yiddish 202:Russian 94:to the 76:in the 39:. 289:Zvezda 283:Career 222:Jewish 218:Soviet 168:Moscow 337:Works 307:Lenin 56:DeepL 461:2021 436:2021 410:2021 403:IMDB 293:film 228:and 158:Died 135:Born 70:must 68:You 249:in 58:or 495:: 452:. 427:. 401:. 232:. 212:: 208:, 204:: 170:, 150:, 463:. 438:. 412:. 317:( 200:( 143:) 139:( 105:. 98:.

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Kremenchuk
Russian Empire
Moscow
Soviet Union
Russian
Yiddish
Soviet
Jewish
Russian
Yiddish
Kremenchuk
Ukraine
Imperial Russia
Kharkiv
Birobidzhan
Amur River
kolkhoz
Red Army
film
1964 film
Lenin

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